[考研类试卷]考研英语(二)模拟试卷85及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(二)模拟试卷 85 及答案与解析一、Section I Use of EnglishDirections: Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D. (10 points) 0 Food is risky. You can choke on a hot dog, be poisoned by a pizza or die slowly from years of eating too much.【C1】_, businesses tha
2、t sell food are suspect. And what could be more【C2】_than an outlet that sells foodand then drives away before its customers expire? Small wonder that so many American cities【 C3】_on food trucks.Miami makes it extremely hard for them to operate,【C4】_do Baltimore and Chicago. Rochester, Pittsburgh and
3、 San Diego are nearly as【C5】_In New York City, a【C6】_on the number of food-truck licences available has【C7】_a black market, pushing up prices into the thousands of dollars.How【C8】_can food trucks be? Your brave correspondent sampled injera with tilapia from one【C9】_Ethiopian snack in Washington, DC.
4、 As The Economist went to press, it had not yet killed her. Perhaps this is【C10】_: food trucks are typically required to cook their food in inspected commercial kitchens.【C11 】_they cause public anger. Local restaurants【C12】_that they steal customers and pay【C13】_rent. Officials worry that their gar
5、ishness will lower the local tone. Many people merely think they are【C14】_After years of legal brawl, Alexandrias city council in Virginia has at last decided to【C15 】_food trucks in parks and parking lots, but not in the streets. The【C16】_starts in July, and the typically mean-spirited conditions a
6、re there to【C17 】_the immobile restaurant trade.【C18 】_, such rules are【C19】_. Food trucks are not that bad. Not only is street vending an important step for aspiring entrepreneurs, but food trucks have enlivened the gastronomic scene and【C20】_more local taxeswherever they have been allowed to roam.
7、1 【C1 】(A)Occasionally(B) Clearly(C) Incidentally(D)Usually2 【C2 】(A)prejudiced(B) dangerous(C) suspicious(D)marvelous3 【C3 】(A)frown(B) excite(C) agree(D)worry4 【C4 】(A)since(B) thus(C) and(D)as5 【C5 】(A)stout(B) stern(C) steady(D)sturdy6 【C6 】(A)growth(B) boom(C) cap(D)change7 【C7 】(A)created(B) t
8、riggered(C) innovated(D)introduced8 【C8 】(A)attractive(B) sad(C) wonderful(D)bad9 【C9 】(A)serving(B) reserving(C) deserving(D)preserving10 【C10 】(A)surprising(B) unsurprising(C) interesting(D)meaningless11 【C11 】(A)Although(B) While(C) Therefore(D)Nonetheless12 【C12 】(A)acclaim(B) complain(C) declai
9、m(D)reclaim13 【C13 】(A)good(B) large(C) no(D)some14 【C14 】(A)clean(B) noble(C) dirty(D)mean15 【C15 】(A)allow(B) ban(C) force(D)repel16 【C16 】(A)engagement(B) experience(C) encouragement(D)experiment17 【C17 】(A)hurt(B) protect(C) alarm(D)protest18 【C18 】(A)As a result(B) For example(C) In effect(D)On
10、 the whole19 【C19 】(A)misguided(B) disgusting(C) constructive(D)effective20 【C20 】(A)compensated(B) degenerated(C) manipulated(D)generatedPart ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)20 Thrifty shoppers do not have to look
11、 far to find a bargain. Offers abound in the cut-throat world of British supermarkets. Received wisdom suggests that people trying to save money on their groceries should shop around to get the best prices. But research presented on April 9th at the Royal Economic Society suggests that those who do
12、so end up paying more.Kun Tian, a researcher at Cardiff Business School, and Ji Yan of Durham University, the papers authors, argue that people who buy all their groceries at just one big supermarket pay less than those who purchase equivalent goods at a mixture of several supermarkets. Data from Ka
13、ntar World panel, a market-research firm, show similar trends. Unlike Mr. Tians study, these cover total purchases rather than comparing equivalent baskets of goods. They show that people who bought groceries in just one store during the 12 weeks to September 2013 spent 631. Those who went to ten di
14、fferent places, by contrast, forked out 1,249.Many of those high-spending shoppers probably had money to burn. But bargain hunters who visit lots of shops are exposed to more products, and thus more likely to buy things they had not planned to, argues Phil Dorsett, an analyst at Kantar. Mr. Tian rec
15、kons that irregular shoppers suffer from missing out on savings offered to more loyal customers, especially those earned after spending a lot in a particular store. Shoppers who frequent an abundance of different outlets also tend to be older, says Mr. Tian. They are less likely than people with you
16、ng families to take advantage of deals that require them to buy goods in bulk.Those who buy their groceries in fewer storesand so spend lessare also more likely to do their shopping online. And on the Internet they are more likely to buy products from supermarkets cheaper own-label ranges, says Edwa
17、rd Garner, also of Kantar. Supermarkets do not always stock such ranges in their small convenience outlets: people shopping in a hurry may as well be encouraged to buy more expensive varieties. In big stores, low-cost lines may be placed well above or below a shoppers line of sight. Search a superma
18、rkets online store, however, and they pop up just as attractively as more expensive brands. That provides much less scope for shelf deception.21 The word “cut-throat“(Line 2, Para. 1)may probably mean_.(A)cruel(B) deadly(C) rough(D)sober22 According to common sense, people who want to buy cheaper go
19、ods should_.(A)go to famous chain stores(B) bargain with the shopkeeper(C) shop at the biggest supermarket(D)compare prices at different shops23 It can be learned from Paragraph 2 that going to different stores may_.(A)be time-consuming(B) help you save money(C) cost you more money(D)be a welcome st
20、rategy24 According to Paragraph 3, what is NOT true for bargain hunters?(A)They are more likely to be impulsive customers.(B) They are more likely to become a member of a store.(C) They may be less likely to buy goods in large quantities.(D)They may miss some discounts offered to regular customers.2
21、5 It can be learned that supermarkets own-label goods_.(A)may be attractive to online shoppers(B) may attract those who shop in a hurry(C) may be put at the most obvious places(D)may be unappealing for their low prices25 Each suburban housewife, wrote Betty Friedan in 1963, struggles with a single q
22、uestion as she makes the beds, shops for groceries, drives children to school and lies beside her husband at night: “Is this all?“ A few years after her ground-breaking book “The Feminine Mystique“ was published, the Census Bureau began collecting data on the proportion of mothers who opt to stay at
23、 home. Over the subsequent decades the statistics answered Friedans question with a heartfelt no.In 1967 the share of mothers who did not work outside the home stood at 49% : by the turn of the millennium it had dropped to just 23%. Many thought this number would continue to fall as women sought to
24、“ have it all“. Instead, the proportion of stay-at-home mothers has been rising steadily for the past 15 years, according to new data gathered by the Pew Research Centre.This partly reflects demographic change. Immigrants, a rising share of the relevant generation, are more likely to be stay-at-home
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